La vera storia di vita di una giovane della marina la cui disciplina unica e il suo legame con il suo cane da combattimento militare hanno salvato molte vite durante il loro spiegamento in I... Leggi tuttoLa vera storia di vita di una giovane della marina la cui disciplina unica e il suo legame con il suo cane da combattimento militare hanno salvato molte vite durante il loro spiegamento in Iraq.La vera storia di vita di una giovane della marina la cui disciplina unica e il suo legame con il suo cane da combattimento militare hanno salvato molte vite durante il loro spiegamento in Iraq.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
- Cpl. Matt Morales
- (as Ramon Rodriguez)
Recensioni in evidenza
"Megan Leavey" is a solid and touching, but slight movie.
Megan (Kate Mara) was drifting. After high school, she had no purpose in life. She lived with her mother (Edie Falco) and stepfather (Will Patton), but didn't actually do much of anything, especially after her best friend died from a drug overdose. Seemingly on a whim, Megan joins the Marine Corps. After she completes basic training, she is trained as an MP, but her lack of self-discipline is still a problem and she quickly gets in trouble with her commander. Her punishment (or "corrective training", as the military calls it) is to work for a hard-nosed Marine called Gunny Martin (Common), cleaning out the kennels of the military working dogs. Megan develops an interest in the K9 unit, but she has to convince Gunny Martin of her reliability and dedication, so she is given an ammo can attached to a rope which she is forced to pretend is a dog on a leash that she puts through its paces on a K9 training course. When a handler preparing for deployment is bitten by his dog, Private First Class Leavey is ordered to step in.
With little time left before that scheduled deployment to Iraq, Megan works hard to train up, complete Rex's training and bond with her new partner. Rex is known as a very difficult and aggressive dog, but Megan manages to tame the savage beast and they end up making an effective and respected team while serving in combat. Megan and Rex are called upon to patrol ahead of everyone else in an effort to find IEDs before they can harm American troops. After some success, Megan and Rex get separated. She begins to work tirelessly to find Rex and, ultimately, to get permission to adopt and care for him. In the midst of all this, Megan works through challenging relationships with Gunny Martin, a K9 unit mentor (Tom Felton), a flirty fellow dog handler (Ramon Rodriguez), her clueless mother and stepfather and her birth father (Bradley Whitford), but all the while, Megan's biggest concern is her relationship with Rex.
"Megan Leavey" is a solid and touching, but slight movie. The script by Pamela Gray ("A Walk on the Moon"), Oscar nominee Annie Mumolo ("Bridesmaids") and Tim Lovestedt (co-writing his first film), and the direction of Gabriela Cowperthwaite ("Blackfish"), give us a realistic look at military life and combat deployments, while keeping the focus mainly on the affecting relationship between Megan and Rex. The subplots of Megan's human relationships give us a good picture of who she is as a person and are well-balanced from a story-telling perspective. But in the final analysis, this is still "just" a story about one Marine and one dog, presented as if similar situations had not happened before or since (which they have). The writing, acting and directing are all strong and produce a film which many Movie Fans will appreciate, especially those interested in military life and those who love four-footed heroes. "B"
solid true-life story
This has a solid true-life story. It is standardized uplift. The Iraq section is the most compelling which is reminiscent of The Hurt Locker. There are some heart-pumping scenes. Then it changes into something else when she returns to America. There are plenty of good issues like PTSD and the military's treatment of their veteran canines. This is solid inspiring military film.
Inspiring and good movie
"Megan Leavey" (2017) is a good movie in short. The first hours was pretty amazing, reminded me of "Hurt Locker" (movie which i love). Later it wasn't so involving or captivating or intense, yet i really enjoyed till the end. Performances were very good by all involved as well it has a good directing.
Overall, "Megan Leavey" is an inspirational story very well told. And if you love dogs, you might pick up some handkerchiefs.
I LOVE this story but Leavey is 6'2; Mara is 5'2
I know a few military dogs and I happen to know they can drag you through a car wash without batting an eye. There's no way someone 5'2, 110 lbs would have been given an 85 lb out of control German Shepherd. That part of the film is so unbelievable unless you know that Leavey is actually 6'2 and probably more like 175 lbs. I also find it extremely difficult to believe that someone training to be a handler would have to learn literally in the field that you can not reveal the name of your dog to the locals -- it's one of the well-known ways insurgents attempt to kill or capture a bomb-sniffing dog. True Marine training is very precise and focused -- are they saying these jokers forgot to tell her or that she was too preoccupied to pay attention? There's a lot we won't know for sure, but even the Army has that on a check-list, not an afterthought in the field.
I like that the film really focused on that relationship but felt a little cheated that we didn't get a sense of the passage of time. She goes from Boot to Corporal without any mention, and the film acts as though she fell off the recruit bus and started cleaning stalls. Actually, she completed 2 trainings before choosing to go to the K9 training camp, and the bombing took place on their 2nd tour in Iraq.
I also dislike that the film calls the dog 'real sick' when he simply had some facial numbness, apparently from his injuries from the bomb, that prevented him from continuing to serve in the Military. However, a little research reveals that once Megan adopted Rex, they worked as a bomb-sniffing team in NY. They also fail to mention that the reason Leavey was not able to be given Rex's location during their long separation was because he was on POTUS detail.
Overall, a heartwarming film that's worth the watch. But if you're like me and you know way too much was left out, just do a little research.
As a side note, any review that starts with a synopsis of the film gets a dislike from me. I don't come here to re-read an outline of the story 30 times. We just want to know what you thought of the film. We already know the actors and read the synopsis, if not already saw the film.
Hidden Gem
There's no denying an impact a dog can have on someone's life. For Corporal Megan Leavey, it was the military K-9 German Shepherd, Rex, who changed her life. The film covers many years of Leavey's time as a K-9 officer with Rex as they save lives uncovering bombs and other dangerous explosives. There are some typical military sequences that set up Leavey as a sort of, mess-up and misplaced character, but for the most part, the film is a unique and inspired take on one section of the military.
Complemented by a solid supporting cast, the real heroes here are Leavey and Rex. Like any great relationship, there are ups and downs. But there are a few indicators that the bond they share isn't something that can be easily quantified, and that made it truly special. Sometimes people are made for each other and sometimes certain dogs are made for certain people. It's just the way it is.
Kate Mara plays Leavey brilliantly, as she so often does with characters. She's one of these under the radar actresses who always seems to bring their A-game. And if not for the fact that I was looking for a movie about a dog, I probably would have forgotten about watching these trailers last summer. The film itself flew under the radar, but I'm sure glad I checked it out.
8.8/10
Lo sapevi?
- QuizMuch of the cast & crew were pleasantly surprised by Tom Felton's very convincing American accent, since they only remembered him from the Harry Potter movies where he used his normal accent.
- BlooperWhen the Master Sergeant (MSgt) first introduces the new-joins, he refers to Megan Leavey as "Private" but her rank insignia is "Private First Class" The Marine Corps does not refer to Privates First Class as "Privates". The Master Sergeant should have introduced her as, "PFC Leavey."
- Citazioni
Megan Leavey: You don't leave because you have somewhere to go, you leave because nothing is keeping you there.
Megan Leavey: [to Rex tearing clothing apart] You wait till we get to Iraq to find your inner puppy?
- Curiosità sui creditiBefore the end credits, there was footage of Rex in the pool and photos of him and the real Megan Leavey.
- Colonne sonoreI'll Never Know
Written by Brayden Deskins, Taylor Stover, Tyler Boyd, Cheapshot (as Colton Fisher), Jason Rabinowitz and Jaron Lamot
Performed by A Yawn Worth Yelling
Courtesy of The Math Club
Under license from Format Entertainment
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Megan Leavey
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 13.406.883 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 3.810.867 USD
- 11 giu 2017
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 14.510.490 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 56min(116 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1






